Millions of young people to strike for climate action

With world leaders about to gather in New York for a UN Climate Action Summit next week, millions of young people worldwide will take off from school or work on Friday to demand urgent measures to stop environmental catastrophe.

Protests, inspired by the 16-year-old Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, are planned in some 150 countries. The aim is for students and others from around the world to speak in one voice about the impending effects of climate change on the planet.

"Soon the sun will rise on Friday the 20th of September 2019. Good luck Australia, The Philippines, Japan and all the Pacific Islands. You go first!" Thunberg posted on Instragram on Thursday.

Thunberg has galvanised young people around the world since she started protesting alone with a sign outside the Swedish parliament building in August 2018. Over the past year, young people in other communities have staged scattered strikes in solidarity with her Fridays for Future movement.

In conjunction with the UN summit, organisers on Friday will hold coordinated strikes around the world for a third time, with Thunberg spearheading a march and rally in New York, home of the United Nations headquarters.

In a show of support, New York City education officials will excuse the absences of any of its 1.1 million public school students who want to participate.

Demonstrators will gather in Lower Manhattan at noon and march about a mile to Battery Park at the edge of the financial district for a rally featuring speeches and music.

“Listen to the scientists.” Greta Thunberg and other teen climate activists are testifying to Congress about the global warming crisis. pic.twitter.com/dAXmYPWTjq

Carbon emissions climbed a record high last year, despite a warning from the UN-backed Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in October that output of the gases must be slashed over the next 12 years to stabilize the climate.

Organisers said the demonstrations would take different forms, but all aim to promote awareness of climate change and demand political action to curb contributing factors to climate change, namely carbon emissions.

Demonstrators in Plettenberg Bay, South Africa planned to dance on the beach in a celebratory pledge to protect their natural heritage. Protesters in Istanbul were heading to a public park for a climate festival with concerts and workshops scheduled throughout the day.

On Wednesday, Thunberg appeared before several committees of US Congress to testify to the next generation's view on climate change.

In lieu of testimony, she submitted a 2018 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that urged rapid, unprecedented changes in the way people live to keep temperatures from rising 1.5 degrees Celsius by 2030.

"I want you to unite behind the science. And then I want you to take action," she said.

CHILDREN HAVE ECO-ANXIETY: PSYCHOLOGISTS

Children are increasingly suffering anxiety and grief about climate change, British psychologists say, advising parents to discuss the issue in an age-appropriate way, Thompson Reuters Foundation reports.

Adults must acknowledge young people's fears and offer them support in taking positive action such as joining Friday's global climate strike, said the Climate Psychology Alliance (CPA), a group of psychologists and researchers.

"Children are saying things like, 'Climate change is here as revenge, you've messed up the climate and nature is fighting back through climate change'," said Caroline Hickman, a teaching fellow at the University of Bath and a CPA executive, on Thursday.

"There is no doubt in my mind that they are being emotionally impacted ... That real fear from children needs to be taken seriously by adults."

Young people were left feeling "betrayed and abandoned" if adults refused to acknowledge their fears about the climate, but they also "don't need horror stories", said Hickman.

Parents should give young people facts about climate change, discuss how it made them feel, and offer them opportunities to do something proactive by considering what they consume or joining a campaign group, she said.

"A lot of the time adults want to protect children from frightening things, but if we protect them too much then we are actually lying to them," she said.

But adults should not overwhelm children with too much bad news at once, and should reassure them that it is not their responsibility to tackle the issue alone, said Hickman, who added that the CPA will shortly publish guidance for families.

The American Psychological Association said they were aware of reports of growing "eco-anxiety" in children, but research was needed to establish how common it is.

"It would not be surprising to find out that climate concerns are causing anxiety in some children," said Russell Shilling, its chief scientific officer.

Comments

Listen to the scientists says Greta Thunberg. Yes but which ones ?
James Cook University (JCU) has now fired two professors for speaking out about shonky research and about the false claims that the Great Barrier Reef was in trouble.
The need to silence these professor arises because JCU gets over $500,000 per year to research these non existent problems. The fired Professor took JCU to court and won decisively.
In NZ our methane research units thrive by telling the world that methane is a dangerous greenhouse gas. The truth is that water absorbs in the same infra red region as methane and as there are 10,000 plus water for each methane then methane is in reality irrelevant. If they said that, then their research funding would cease, their empires would be disbanded, their annual trips to IPCC conferences stopped, their influence on government policy gone along with their credibility. So they stick with the IPCC despite the fact that it is not supported by evidence.
So if you want to know which scientists to believe, chose one who is not on the government payroll and one who analyses observations from the Earth, not those who's work is based on inadequate climate models.

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